Daily Tribune, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 14 June 1919 — Page 2
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CITY COUNCIL MAKES IMC RULE CHANCES
Renter "Parking Oil Ohio Street Is Abandoned, and New Congested ^..District Is Named.
Tsamlngr-.a "congested district" and providing a number of hew features In traffic and parking of automobiles, Including the changing of the present rliin of parking on'Ohio street, genfral ordinance No. 8 was passed by* v tnembers of the common council in a »pecial session Friday evening. ... Heading the changos is that reverting the Ohio street parking to tne oil
Curb plan of parking* instead of the Renter of the street, with the pro-
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Vision that there be no parking within thirty feet of a^.gasoline tank or air fetation on Ohio stroot, which has gained the nitne of "automobile row'1 because of the number of tire and accessory shops upon it.
A congtsted fi^trict to named for flown town, taking in Ohio and Cherry »tm-ta tnd from Third to Tentn tstn ots* In this area the speed limit
I? ten miles an hour, and no turns '^•hall be made in a street excepting at Corner#. A ten-minute parking time v Is permitted on Wabash avenue, while several streets have "been designated as non-parking to the same time limit
North Sixth, South Seventh, North Righth, North Ninth, or the west side ©f North Seventh.
No vehicles will' be permitted to park on South Ninth street from Ohio Street to the first alley north, this being a protection to the fire department In making runs.
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North and southbound vehicles are jriven preference in the right of way except on Wabash avenue, where the (fast and west bound shall have Preference North and south bound vehicles are directed to decrease their Ippeed at streets, especially Maple, fcighth. Third and Lu'ayette avenue, railroad crossings, and Locust, Chestnut, Ohio, Walnut, Poplar, College And Hulman streets and Washington *venua.
TEACHERS MAROONED.
No Ships Are Available for Transporting 300 Young Women. HONOLULU. June 1.—(By mall).— Wore than 300 school teachers of Hawaii, who have filed applications for transportation to the mainland this Hummer on army transports, are to Buffer a great disappointment. The July and August transports are already practically booked for army officers. soldiers and federal employes, and only a few, if any, of the teach#rs will be able to get to this coast for their vacations. Being employed of the territorial government, public •chool teachers are entitled to transportation on army transports—when there is room for them.
Nor will many of the teachers be "able to go home for the summer even if they are prepared to pay for tickets
On passenger liners.
UNION LABOR PROTESTS.
Big Demonstration At Washington Against Prohibition. WASHINGTON, June 14.—Anti-pro-hibition forces from many cities, composed largely of union men opposed to abolishing the manufacture and sale of beer and light wines, descended on Washington for a great demonstration at the capitol, planned by the central labor union of the District of Columbia.
Many .special trains arrived during the morning, and while awaiting the hour of the meeting—2 o'clock—the delegations with their bands marched about the city. As the inilux continued, union officials in charge of arrangements predicted- their
first
estimates
a crowd of 100,000 would be exceeded.
STRIKE IS WEAKENING.
'WINNIPEG, Man., June 14,—Officials of the railway brotherhoods announced today that "spare men" have been assigned to ,1obs vacated by Winnipeg firemen and trainmen who
:have
left their posts as a result of the .•'sympathetic strike of the Winnipeg .firemen's and trainmen's locals.
Trans-continental traffic* is normal, it was announced.
ONE STATUE LESS.
Major Oerhardt Monninger Saturday sent to the Tribune from Metz a picture of the statue of Kaiser Wilhelm which was destroyed by the French army when they marched into Metz. Another view shows the imposing «i4,tue toppled over in the street.
STREET CAR HITS "WAGON.
A street car on the Union depot line .'struck a delivery wag'n of the Morge Delivery company this afternoon on North Ninth street. The mules hitched to the truck were knocked down and ^^bruised and the driver was slightly inijured.
Pa says to Ma-
loosen up, give the Kid plenty of
POST IbASTIES
Corn Flakes thai ro»k*yau smi!*,
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IF PEAGE FAILS FIGHT ING BEGINS JUNE 21
Continued From Page One.
conference on the eve of the presentation of the treaty. Representatives of interested states, however, i^ere prepared when the Austrian treaty came before the plenary session and objected strenuously, to corresponding clauses being included in that^ convention. This objection has been one of the principal causes for the postponement of tho presentation of the entire treaty to the Austrians, the classes in question being eliminated from the first installment of the pact. Small states are as yet unwilling to accept the clauses, even when coupled with guarantees of territorial integrity.
Treaty Nearly Finished. PARIS, June 14.—The council ot five continued he work of editing the revised ptacc treaty this morning, at Ihe arno time enabling Baron.Makino, the Japanese Representative to acquaint himself with the document. The work is nearly completed and' it In beiieved the treaty will go to the revision committee late tonight,, It is sa:d that it will be printed and ready for delivery to the Germans Monday or Tuesday.
It is the present plan of tho council to renew consideration of the Austrian terms Monday. Representatives of Turkey will be received Tuesday.
If no other developments arise, President Wilson probably will make his trip to Brussels between Wednesday and the expiration of the German time limit.
Some modifications were made by Che council yesterday in the labor covenant in the peace treaty.
The existing labor situation in various countries, coupled with clever German tactics, had resulted in this part of the treaty becoming one of the principal points of attack in ttie counter proposals. The situation caused a lengthy* discussion, which resulted in certain .modifications til the convention.
The allied reply to the German proposals, it developed today, will lay particular stress upon the character of the permanent reparations commission. It will be explained to the Germans that this commission is not a tyrannical body, but that it will administer its duties in a spirit of fairness and helpfulness, so as to .facilitate Germany's economic reconstruction.
GRADUATES FROM SMITH.
Mrs. W. C. Topping left for the east Friday to attend the graduation exercises of her daughter, Miss Lucile, who will graduate next Tuesday morning from Smith college, Northampton, Mass. Miss Topping has been an active student in the social and athletic aflairs of the college and was a member of the Phi Kappa Phi sorority during the last two years. Many social events will occur commencement week, following which Miss Topping will accompany her mother home.
WILL BE HOTTER
WASHINGTON, June 14.—Weather predictions for the week beginning Monday, issued by the weather bureau today, include:
Ohio Valley—Occasional local thunder showers are probable although fair weather will prevail second half of week in Ohio valley. Temperatures average above normal.
Region of Great Lakes—Pair, although some prospect of local showers first half of week over north portion. Temperatures above normal, first half of week, nearly normal thereafter.
Obituary
JOSEPH A. COTTRKIX.
•Joseph A. ("ottreli, 6S years old, of North Terre Haute, died at 11 o'clock Friday morning at Madison, Ind. He is survived by three daughters, Mrs. Geneva Haase, Mrs. Maggie Smith of Indianapolis and
Miss
Delia Oottrell at
home, and a son. Homer Cottrell. The body will be brought to the home at North Terre Haute.
Tin, funeral will be held from the residence at 2 o'clock Sunday afternoon with burial in the Markle cemetery.
KmCTH CRAWFORD SPRBBB. Kenneth Crawford Surber, 10-months'-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Geo. A. Surber, of 1403 North Third street, died at 9 o'clock Saturday morning. The funeral arrangements will be announced later. a*.
MOST I 8EI) AI TOS CHANGE "HANDS through tho want ads in The Tribune.
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French General Pays Tribute at Qaentin Roosevelfs Grave
IKING BIG CLAIMS
Say the Western Union Has Daily 115,000 Messages Which Can Not Be Handled.
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CHICAGO* June 14.—Leaders of the nation wide strike of commercial telegraphers declared today that reports had been received showing that heavy files of estern Union telegrams were piled up at relay points because of the refusal of railroad telegraphers to h&ndle commercial business.
Railroad telegraphers were instructed by the Order of Railway Telegraphers to discontinue handling'commercial messages after 6 a. m. today as a means of aiding commercial telegraphers in their strike for "the right of collective bargaining and wage adjustments."
After officials of the Western Union Telegraph company had declared the railroad operators were not following the order and that business was normal, S. J. Konenkamp, internatibmi^ president of telegraphers, said not a commercial message had moved on the Missouri Pacific lines, that definite reports showed hundreds of towns in Iowa, Illinois and other nearby states without telegraph service and that all outlying districts would be likewise affected by night.
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"The Western Union has estimated that each of 32,000 of their stations handles Ave message a day," he said. "Taking their own figures which are extremely low, there are 115,000 messages, say, that cannot be moved. This constitutes, more than a third of the Western Union's business based on figures in the annual reports."
While minimizing the latest news In the strike, officers of the Association of Western Union Employes today wired E. J. Manion, president of the Order of Railway Telegraphers, to reconsider the instructions to the railroad operators. The telegram said that as the Western Union operators are not on strike the action has placed the railroad telegraphers union on record as opposing the Western Union workers.
Strike lenders claimed that more than the 22,000 workers are out that pickets were inducing telephone girls throughout the country to join the strike called for Monday by the International Brotherhood of ElectricWorkers and that the result of the referendum being taken by tho brokers division of the telegrapher's union would be known probably by next Tuesday.
Yet Another.
Father—"Don't ask so many questions, child. Curiosity killed the cat." Little B'oy—"What did the cat want to know, dad?"—Edinburgh Scotsman.
Leads Striking W. U. Telegraphers
S. jr.
KOXENCAMP.
S J. Konencamp is president of the Commercial Telegraphers' Union of America.
He
threatens to make the
present strike of Western Union operatives, now confined to the south, nation wide. The strike has not spread to the Postal company*
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GBNEKAL BKRKHUIM KNEELING AT THE GRAVE OF QI ENTIN ROOSETELT.
This photograph, which has Just reaohed the United States, shows General Berkheim of the French army paying tribute at the grave of Lieut. Quentin Roosevelt. On Mothers' day the general, accompanied by American and French army officers, placed wreaths on the grave of Lieutenant Roosevelt, aviation corps, U. S. A., in the name of the mothers of America.
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SEE RED PERIL III EXPLOSIVESFOUNDINCOAL
An anonymoys letter, warning the chief that Chicago shortly will be in the grip of a terrorist movement, also left him undisturbed.
Mailed apparently from St. Louis, it made no personal threats, but asserted that "at a date close at hand" the I. W. W. and other radical organizations will arise and then the chief might expect serious trouble.
The chief admitted, nevertheless, that radicals were hard to put in places of safety. "They are no.t.aubject to the vagrancy act," he explained "because most of them work all day and spend all night airing their dissatisfaction with the government."
YOUNG HEROES AT 0XF0RB. Many Customs and Traditions Of Old University Will Seem Tame.
The returning hero, fresh from battle fields, will tno longer rush to the cricket field and the river at Oxfor# with the zest of young barbarians at their play. To one who may wear the ribbon of the military cross or the D. S. O., the position of his college boat in the eights can rto longer seem the one matter of life and death, and even the halo of a goal shines with diminished glory.
So, too, in lesser pursuits. How shall the distinguished young major fix his mind upon the squabbles of compartments in ancient Greece, when he himself has motored from Saloniki to Athens in a day, and on to Sparta in the next? Or what will he feel when questioned on his fading memories of the irregular verbs? Probably most public school boys are haunted to old age by a dream—a terrible nightmare —of being "put on" by the old beadmaster when they have not taken the trouble to prepare a line of the passage. It makes no difference that they are more than 50 and the headmaster has long been dead. The horror of the situation remains appalling, and the dream is far more frequent than any of Freud's imaginary perversions.
The feelings of the soldier returning to the class and lecture room will be much the same, with a sense of futility added. For, indeed, it is impossible to go back in life, and a second childhood is not like the first. Little victims play regardless of their doom, but not men who have known what doom can do.—From the Nation (London).
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tlirtist- through the opening. In type they are the same da those of the United States arfny.
Car Had Been Robbed.
The coal was sold by the Lehigh Valley CoaJ, company and shipped from it's mine at Coxton. Pa„ arriving at the ...Douglas company's yards Thursday, There the seal was discovered to have been broken and five tons of coal removed. The grenades lay in the corner of the car from which the. coal had been abstracted. "Dynamite is often found in coal," said Chief Garrity, "because u is used In mining and sometimes carelessly shoveled into the. railroad cars. But there appears no question that the grenades were 'planted' deliberately."
The chief did not believe, however that a conspiracy to create terrorism existed in Chicago, though news dispatches from New York and Washington warned that this city was the pivot in Hhe contemplated July 4 demonstration.
Fifty Detectives at Work. Following an appeal by Attorney General Palmer to congress for & special appropriation of
$500,000
with
which to ryn down the authors of recent bomb outrages against public officials, and a raid on the offices of the Russian soviet representatives in New York, it was announced that fifty government detectives were at work on clews to new attempts at assassination In Chicago.
Chief Garrity said he had heard of no such government activity and neither had Detective Sergeant McDonough of the radical squad. "W-i have every radical agitator under surveillance, the chief said. "Of course, it is barely possible they may have been working under cover. Ther® need be no fear here that the scares in the east will be repeated."
the Original
Malted Milk Avoid Imitations &Substitute^
PHONE TRIBUNE YOUR WANT ADA,
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HER FRIENDS SAY SHE LOOKS WELL
Indianapolis Woman' Rapid Recovery Draws Comment At Capital.
Mrs. Elizabeth Plunkett, 23 South Alabama street, Indianapolis, is being congratulated by all her friends who tell her $he is the very picture of health.
Mrs. Plunkett has charge of large apartment building at the above address. She is very enthusiastic about Ifcpgea. She says:
MRS. ELIZABETH PLUNKETT. "Ariy person who iees me now would scarcely believe that for ten years I suffered with catarrah. I honestly believe I would still be suffering if I hadn't taken .Pepgen. "Frequently my nasal passajen would stop up' and then I could feel mucus dropping down my throat I r.m told this mucus Is very poisonous and will affect every organ in the body. It finally affected my kldn-ys and bladder. "My kidneys became badly deranged. I had pains in the small of my back. My feet and ankles swelled i at times, until I could hardly bear the Weight of my body. My bladder trouhjc was almost unbearable. "Of course I was very nervous and couldn't sleep soundly. My head buzzed and my ears rang. I looked like a mere shadow of my former self. 'My sister asked me to try Pepgen, and as she recommended it so highly, I tried it with tho result th»t am now feeling fine."
Mrs. Plunkett is not the only person who recommends Pepgen for ailments of the above nature. Scores tAll how it has relieved them of catarrhal ills and the many symptoms that catarrh causes.
Get Pepgen at the Terminal Pharmacy, Ninth and Wabash, Tsrre Haute Gillls' Drug Store, Clinton, or from any other first-class drug store anywhere.—A1 vert isemont.
TWO INTREPID AVIATORS ON PERILOUS TRIP
Continued From Page One.
is from five to ten times that of the commercial vessel. "The high speed of the airplane renders it necessary to make frequent observations for position, and this in turn, makes it undesirable to use the slow, albeit accurate, means of calculation ordinarily employed. In consequence, special charts have been devised for use with the sun or stars, which enable the pilot to fix his position in a very short time, although not with the accuracy demanded in marine work. With the aid of these charts, together with a sextant for observing the sun or stars, a chronometer, and compass, the pilot should be able to make a landfall within twerlty to thirty miles of the desired point. "This, however, he will not be able to do unless he keeps careful watch on the direction and strength of the wind, which may after between his observations and without his knowledge. In order to check this, an instrument known as the 'drift indicator* has been devisted, by means of which the pilot can ascertain the direction of the wind, and the speed at which he is traveling over the ocean, so long as he can see the ocean and the flares or smoke-bombs which he drops into it for the purpose of making his observations of drift. "Should the pilot be flying in clouds so that he can see neither the ocean nor the sky, he can only depend upon his compass, which gives direction only. Under these circumstances he may drift many miles out of his course without being aware of it, unless he employs a late development of wireless telegraphy, by means of which he can measure his bearings from two or more land stations and fix his position at the point of intersection. For short distances, this method has proved Its reliability, but it has yet to be proved that it is suitable for such a journey as the transAtlantic flight until further improvements have been made in the apparatus employed.
FOR GOODNESS SAKE Cure your Quick Consumption in 30 days with BRAZILIAN BALM which kills the germs and heals the lungs.
N A Z I O V A O O O W
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Tell your story through the press and reach the greatest number of potential customers at the smallest cost.
Advertising, intelligently planned and executed, is the surest, quickest and most economical means of securing sales—stimulating business.
0. S. DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
i W. B. WILSON,, Secretary
ROGER W. BABSON
Director General, Information and Education Servic*
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Hotel Deming j!
Sunday Dinners'$125 Table d'Hote
Chicken Oumbo, a la Creole or Consomme Chateline Radishes Green Olives
Baked Whiteflsh, Sauce Chilian Potatoes, French Fried Turkey Croquettes, with Green Peas
Roast Capon, Stuffed, Giblet Sauce Roast Prime Rib Beef, au Jus Browned Potatoes New Potatoes in Cream
New String Beans Btewed Tomatoes Fruit Salad Strawberry Mayonnaise Choice of Ice Cream and Cake Blackberry Meringue Cobbler.
DINING ROOM OPEN
From 6 to 8:30 P.M.
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SATURDAY, JUNE 14, 1*19.
Did You Whistle:
As sure as you drank a bottle of Whistle you understand why thig festive name is so Appropriate,
WHISTLE
the
pep
of
pure sugar
and fruit in bottles
'It's tloudy in the bottle"
Tes there is pep in every drop and it is sold by every drink shop. It is a pure food drink that delights old and young, sick and well, rich and poor, because it provides the sugar energy that has made Americans the wonder of the world.
Instead of serving "big feeds" serve Whistle. Serve it often, for it is relished as often as served.
Whistle is sold in bottles only* just Whistle/'
Call 12—Either Phone
EOPLE will buy if you tell them about the things you have to sell.
ADVERTISE
SAYS,THE
U. S. DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
American public is a buying1 public. It has the money to spend and will spend it if you will show them the need 'for spending it. Therefore—Advertise 1
This is the message front the Department ©f Labor to all live, progressive merchants who believe in the future prosperity of America.
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